I love listening to Pandora all day long in Safari, but in order for all the features of Pandora to work properly, I have to turn off Safari’s blocking of pop-up windows. But then I get lots of pop-up advertisements in the other websites that I visit. Is there any way to turn off pop-ups just for Pandora?

In Pages ’09, I love working with my documents in full-screen mode. It prevents me from getting distracted from other windows in the background. How can I get my other applications to display their documents in full-screen mode as well?

Our art director, Robin, rocks a tricked-out Mac Pro at work, but at
home her trusty steed is a Power Mac G5. Compared to her work machine,
the 6-year-old G5 could qualify for Social Security benefits, but it’s
still trucking along, after previous upgrades to the RAM and hard drive.

Recently,
however, the SuperDrive stopped reading DVDs. And poor Robin worried
this might be the final warning sign that her Mac isn’t long for this
world. After all, a friend of hers bought the same one at the same
time, and that G5 suffered a fatal frying of the logic board and went
up to that great server farm in the sky.

I love spending my afternoons peacefully lying in a field, staring up
at the sky and looking at the figures and formations my mind conjures
up from the clouds, from cats to dragons to my boss’s face asking me
what the heck I’m doing lying in a field and not in the office on a
Monday afternoon. In this tutorial, I’ll show you how to create your
own images within cloud formations without ever having to leave your
desk. We’ll use Phoenix, Aviary.com’s Web-based image editor, which is
akin to Adobe Photoshop but doesn’t require you to install any software.

I’m running a Power Mac G4 MMD (mirrored-drive doors), a 7-year-old
computer. I’m proud to say that I also squeezed all the juice out of my
previous Mac, a Power Mac 7600, and used it for just as long. That’s
what I like about Macs: even old ones are still functional.

But
why did ATI discontinue the Radeon 9800 Pro Mac Edition? Mine is less
than three years old, but it’s giving me problems. ATI won’t repair the
card because the parts it needs are no longer available, and stores
that claim to sell it still want a whopping $250 for what is supposed
to be an “old” card.